TidBITS#1144/01-Oct-2012
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1144>


  iOS 6 comes under scrutiny this week, after it is implicated in
  excessive battery drain and mysterious cellular data usage. Adam Engst
  traces his battery problems to corrupt Safari bookmarks, and Glenn
  Fleishman offers pointers to a number of people trying to understand
  why their iPhones are suddenly  consuming significant amounts of
  cellular data. Adam also shares the latest news about what’s happening
  at the upcoming MacTech Conference 2012, and he examines the
  hullabaloo surrounding the massive criticism of Apple’s new Maps app
  in iOS 6, which prompted an apology from Apple CEO Tim Cook last week.
  Glenn also covers how Facebook Groups now allow Dropbox-based file
  sharing, and Kirk McElhearn looks in depth at the new Notifications
  feature in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. Last, but not least, don’t miss
  our 50-percent-off Take Control sale, specially extended through 3
  October 2012 for TidBITS readers! Notable software releases this week
  include Server Admin Tools 10.7.5, OS X Server 2.1.1, Mellel 3.0.2,
  Aperture 3.4.1, and Airfoil 4.7.3.

Articles
    MacTech Conference 2012 Adds Hollywood Flair
    Save 50% on All Take Control Ebooks through 3 October 2012
    Facebook Groups Gain Dropbox-Based File Sharing
    Examining Maps in the Wake of Tim Cook’s Apology
    What’s Behind Mysterious Cellular Data Usage in iOS 6?
    Solving iOS 6 Battery Drain Problems
    Going In Depth on Mountain Lion’s Notifications
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 1 October 2012
    ExtraBITS for 1 October 2012


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MacTech Conference 2012 Adds Hollywood Flair
--------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13302>

  When I first wrote about the upcoming MacTech Conference 2012 in Los 
  Angeles (see “MacTech Conference 2012 Slated for October 
  17–19,” 27 August 2012), I hinted there would be some special 
  events that weren’t yet public. They are now. First, conference 
  attendees will be treated to a behind-the-scenes evening at Walt 
  Disney Animation Studios, with a focus on the advanced technology 
  that Disney uses to create their animated films. Then there’s the 
  conference party the second evening, which will take place at 
  Jillian’s, where bowling, air hockey, video games, and Guitar Hero 
  will compete with karaoke for entertainment — personally, I’m 
  staying as far away from the karaoke as possible. Plus, during the 
  first day of the show, a company called Profiles in History will be 
  displaying a variety of Hollywood memorabilia.

<http://www.mactech.com/conference/about>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13228>
<http://www.mactech.com/conference/activities>

  Along with the top-notch speakers lined up to talk, the keynote for 
  this year’s MacTech Conference will be on “Tech’s Role in 
  Shaping the Future,” and will be given by Matt Drance, a former 
  Apple evangelist and the guy behind the Apple Outsider site. Also of 
  particular interest is a special session by NASA Jet Propulsion Labs 
  on “Interplanetary Networking, Curiosity Style” — just imagine 
  the latency when pinging Mars!

<http://www.appleoutsider.com/>

  I’ll be at MacTech Conference the entire time, and Michael Cohen 
  will be joining me for some of the first day. Hope to see you there, 
  and I’ll be organizing at least one run for anyone who wants to 
  venture out for a few miles with me during the conference.

  The three-day MacTech Conference kicks off with a keynote at 10 AM 
  on Wednesday, 17 October 2012, and continues through the afternoon 
  of Friday, 19 October 2012. All breakfasts, lunches, and dinners are 
  provided, as well as evening entertainment on both nights, plus 
  snack-filled breaks for networking time.

  Hotel rooms sold out once, but MacTech managed to get another block 
  released. For a limited time, a discounted conference registration 
  costs only $899 for TidBITS readers and includes food, a six-month 
  MacTech subscription, and all the sessions and activities. A small 
  number of partial and full student scholarships are also available. 
  Travel and hotel rooms cost extra, of course, but it’s easy to fly 
  to LAX, and rooms at the Sheraton Universal (where the conference 
  will be held) are available to attendees at the conference price of 
  $184 per night, plus taxes.

<http://www.mactech.com/events/TidBITS>


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Save 50% on All Take Control Ebooks through 3 October 2012
----------------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13297>

  Although we haven’t said much about this in TidBITS, we’ve been 
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  This is a great opportunity to ensure that you have top-notch 
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  Scan the Mountain Lion titles in our catalog and read more about any 
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<http://tid.bl.it/september-sale-mountain-lion-tidbits>

  Not sure what you want? Here’s a quick guide to our latest and 
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  And, whether you’re running Mountain Lion or not, we have recently 
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* “Take Control of iCloud,” by Joe Kissell: Everything you need to 
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* “Take Control of Spotlight for Finding Anything on Your Mac,” by 
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* “Take Control of Your 802.11n AirPort Network,” by Glenn 
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* “Take Control of the Mac Command Line with Terminal,” by Joe 
  Kissell: Get comfortable with telling your Mac what to do by issuing 
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  Don’t miss our application-specific titles as well, including 
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  which we recently updated to cover Smile’s new TextExpander 4. 
  Then there are Joe’s “Take Control of Getting Started with 
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<http://tid.bl.it/september-sale-mac-apps-tidbits>

  Once on the Take Control catalog page, you can click any title (and 
  then click the cover image that appears) to read more about any 
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  The sale lasts through Wednesday, 3 October 2012, so please pass the 
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  Please note that our cart can’t combine discounts, so those of you 
  who are TidBITS members (many thanks!) and who receive 30 percent 
  off every order should instead stick to ordering with the 
  50-percent-off links in this article, since that’s a better deal.


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Facebook Groups Gain Dropbox-Based File Sharing
-----------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13300>

  Facebook Groups may be used for all sorts of purposes: neighborhood 
  exchanges, kids’ sports teams, Wiccan circles, and much more, as 
  long as everyone has a Facebook account. As you know from any sort 
  of digital group to which you belong, it’s often useful to share 
  files among members, such as documents and schedules. Facebook has 
  tapped Dropbox to provide an additional option.

<http://www.facebook.com/about/groups/>
<https://www.dropbox.com/help/383/en>

  Facebook Groups already let you click Add File in a new post and 
  choose a document from local storage to be uploaded and linked to 
  the post for others to download. In a change being rolled out to 
  users — and, thus, you may not see it yet when you log into 
  Facebook — a new option to add files from Dropbox will also 
  appear. Any linked files are available for viewing and download, 
  just as with local files. But what sets this new feature apart is 
  that what people are actually getting is a _link_ to the file on 
  Dropbox, so if the file changes in the Dropbox folder, everyone who 
  subsequently downloads it gets the latest version. Even better, if 
  the owner of the Dropbox file makes a change, group members receive 
  a notification, so they can return and download it again.

  This Facebook feature works very much like Dropbox’s existing 
  public-file sharing feature: a token-based URL is exposed in 
  Facebook and can be copied and distributed without providing access 
  to any other files in the owner’s Dropbox account.

  When the rollout is complete (over the coming days, Dropbox says), 
  all Facebook Groups members will see a Dropbox link, and will have 
  the option to link in a Dropbox account.

  Dropbox offers free accounts that include a paltry 2 GB of storage 
  (compared with 5 GB for Google Drive and 7 GB for Microsoft 
  SkyDrive), but adding photos and referring new users can increase 
  your free storage to as much as 18 GB. If you need more space, 
  Dropbox has paid plans starting at $10 per month for 100 GB of 
  storage.

<https://www.dropbox.com/help/200/en>


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Examining Maps in the Wake of Tim Cook’s Apology
------------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13301>
  16 comments

  Since the release of iOS 6, the Internet has been overrun with 
  criticisms of Apple’s new Maps app, which replaces the previous 
  Google Maps-driven Maps app with entirely new code and data. Most 
  notably, Apple’s new Maps suffers from incomplete and incorrect 
  data and imagery, and lacks the transit directions that many people 
  relied upon in Google Maps. Even more troubling for some people was 
  the loss of saved locations without warning of any sort — one of 
  our readers was particularly distraught to lose numerous saved 
  locations of sentimental places in her life, built up in Maps over 
  time since her first iPhone.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/27/technology/personaltech/apples-new-maps-app-is-upgraded-but-full-of-snags-review.html>

  The criticism reached a sufficient pitch that Apple CEO Tim Cook, 
  much as Steve Jobs did in similar situations, has released a public 
  letter addressing the topic. In the letter, Cook acknowledges the 
  problems, apologizes for the frustration it has caused iOS users, 
  recommends that users try alternative apps and Web-based services, 
  and promises that Apple will improve Maps. 

<http://www.apple.com/letter-from-tim-cook-on-maps/>

  Unsurprisingly, Cook paints Apple’s decision to replace the 
  long-standing Maps app as driven by the desire to add features that 
  weren’t possible with the old app. Hidden behind that statement 
  are competitive agendas that may never be fully known, with Apple 
  reportedly complaining that Google wasn’t bringing features like 
  turn-by-turn directions and vector-based maps to the iPhone version 
  of Maps long after those features had appeared on Android phones. 
  But Apple didn’t have to make the move now either; The Verge 
  reports that Apple’s contract with Google for Google Maps had over 
  a year left. What’s unclear is which company was actually 
  responsible for the Maps app, and whether the contract precluded the 
  addition of new features.

<http://www.theverge.com/2012/9/25/3407614/apple-over-a-year-left-on-google-maps-contract-google-maps-ios-app>

  More generally, Apple is congenitally uncomfortable with being 
  reliant on other companies for core capabilities of its products, 
  and that’s especially true with competitors like Google. (Also 
  dropped in iOS 6 was the bundled YouTube app, which had failed to 
  keep pace with YouTube changes, though Google quickly pushed out a 
  new YouTube app for the iPhone.)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/youtube/id544007664?mt=8>

  So what lessons are there to be learned from the Maps debacle, and 
  what should we think about it? (Thanks to everyone who contributed 
  to the TidBITS Talk discussion about Maps, where many opinions were 
  aired, and which informed some of my thinking on this topic.)

<http://talk.tidbits.com/Maps-in-iOS6-td4656014.html>

  Clearly, Apple screwed up here. Creating a mapping service is 
  unquestionably a Herculean task, and when Google Maps debuted, it 
  certainly suffered from its share of embarrassing errors and 
  omissions. But given how Apple featured Maps in iOS 6 presentations, 
  it seems as though Apple executives failed to realize that the new 
  Maps was not sufficiently mature. That’s the charitable view; the 
  less-charitable might think that Apple knew full well that the new 
  Maps didn’t measure up but felt that its limitations wouldn’t 
  hinder sales of iOS devices. The problems with Maps may not have 
  slowed iPhone 5 sales, but they do make it harder to trust Apple in 
  the future, and those who lost important saved locations feel even 
  more let down.

  It’s important to realize that the new Maps doesn’t exist in a 
  vacuum. It can’t be — and shouldn’t be — evaluated solely on 
  its own merits because it enters a world already populated by 
  high-quality mapping services with which users have significant 
  experience. We _know_ what a mapping app can do, and should do, and 
  Apple should have realized that they’d need to meet that basic 
  level before launching. Perhaps there was no way to determine just 
  how inaccurate it would be ahead of time (though Security Editor 
  Rich Mogull found that the pre-release version of Maps had trouble 
  even in Silicon Valley), but the lack of transit directions seems 
  painfully obvious.

  Should you use Maps? If you’re just exploring an area remotely, 
  certainly. If data accuracy isn’t of paramount importance, as it 
  is when actually navigating to an unfamiliar area, then Maps is 
  fine. But if you have previously relied on Maps for directions, I 
  encourage you to get an alternative mapping program or Web-based 
  service, either to replace Maps in everyday use or to serve as a 
  backup in case Maps lets you down. In my tests so far, Maps has 
  performed adequately, though its spoken directions aren’t as 
  precise or helpful as Navigon’s (read on).

  During that time driving around Silicon Valley, Rich Mogull relied 
  instead on Navigon, which has just added Urban Guidance that 
  considers public transit when calculating pedestrian routes, along 
  with a Last Mile feature that automatically offers walking 
  directions when you park near your destination. Navigon is my 
  favorite GPS navigation app as well, thanks in part to its system 
  for storing maps (where I drive, cellular coverage can be spotty) 
  but breaking them up by location, so I don’t have to waste 
  gigabytes of space on one app. But there are many others, including 
  the free Waze and MapQuest, and the paid MotionX, Garmin 
  StreetPilot, CoPilot, and TomTom. Plus, it seems likely that Google 
  will eventually publish an independent Google Maps app for iOS; I 
  can’t imagine why Google hasn’t done so already, unless the 
  delay is due to behind-the-scenes negotiations with Apple.

<http://www.navigon.com/portal/us/produkte/navigationssoftware/mobile_navigator_iphone_us.html>
<http://itunes.apple.com/app/waze-social-gps-traffic-gas/id323229106?mt=8>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mapquest/id316126557?mt=8>
<http://www.garmin.com/apps/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/motionx-gps/id299949744?mt=8>
<http://www.copilotlive.com/us/store/iPhone.asp>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/tomtom/id326055452>

  Of course, the new Maps can and will improve. Most of the problems 
  revolve around the server side of the equation, and with over 100 
  million users searching for billions of locations per month, Apple 
  will have unimaginable amounts of data with which to improve the 
  mapping databases that underpin both the visual maps and directions. 
  Could Apple have started collecting that data with the old Maps app, 
  or was that data funneled only to Google? We may never know.

  A significant way that Apple can improve Maps is when users report 
  problems; if you tap the lower-right corner of the map display to 
  reveal the settings, there’s a link to Report a Problem; a similar 
  button appears in the detail page for any point of interest. But 
  some people are put out that a company with Apple’s billions of 
  dollars is seemingly relying on user efforts rather than providing 
  better quality data to start. Others have pointed out that it’s 
  fairly clumsy to report problems in iOS, as opposed to within a 
  Web-based interface on a computer.

  Speaking of a Web-based version of Maps, Apple does seem to be 
  moving in that direction. Sharing a location from Maps generates a 
  maps.apple.com URL, and while clicking that link currently redirects 
  to Google Maps, I can’t see Apple continuing to give Google that 
  traffic and ad revenue going forward. Perhaps we’ll see a Maps 
  icon in the iCloud Web interface soon.

  In the end, I think Apple released this new Maps prematurely, and 
  the company deserves all the lumps it’s receiving. That said, Tim 
  Cook’s apology was generally spot on, and a much-appreciated 
  acknowledgement of problems the company caused through inattention 
  and hubris. Let’s hope that the apology is not just empty words, 
  and the embarrassment causes Apple to refocus on software quality 
  and reexamine policies that exist only to give Apple control rather 
  than improving the experience for everyone in the ecosystem.


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What’s Behind Mysterious Cellular Data Usage in iOS 6?
------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman: <glenn@tidbits.com>, @glennf
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13304>
  9 comments

  My Twitter feed is full of people telling me about mysterious data 
  usage over cellular networks after installing iOS 6 or acquiring an 
  iPhone 5. Adam Engst already penned an article explaining potential 
  causes and solutions for fast battery draining in iOS 6 (see 
  “Solving iOS 6 Battery Drain Problems,” 28 September 2012). This 
  may have some bearing on the unexpected cell data consumption, too, 
  especially given that he tracked his problems to corrupted Safari 
  bookmarks syncing constantly through iCloud, which could happen 
  while away from a Wi-Fi network.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13303>

  But many of the reports I’ve received are from people whose 
  iPhones are set to use Wi-Fi, and the phones show a Wi-Fi network 
  connection item when woken from sleep. One Twitter buddy, Anthony 
  Hecht, says AT&T told him that when his iPhone is in “idle mode” 
  (standby), it always reverts to cellular, which is wrong. AT&T 
  customer service also told him to turn cellular data off (Settings > 
  General > Cellular Data) whenever it’s idle, which is crazy 
  making. He has seen 9 GB in unexpected mobile use, largely while at 
  home based on his online charge breakdown, in just a week.

<https://twitter.com/ahecht/statuses/251719084033589248>
<https://twitter.com/ahecht/statuses/251726070011789312>

  Many people attributed this problem to usage by Apple’s Podcasts 
  app, which has been documented to exhibit bad behavior when 
  downloading and streaming over cellular (see “Does Apple’s 
  Podcasts App Suck Cellular Data?,” 17 September 2012). It can 
  download the same podcast file repeatedly. Even after Apple added a 
  switch in Podcasts 1.1 to restrict data use to Wi-Fi, my colleagues 
  can still track cellular downloads with the app, especially if a 
  download or streaming was already in progress when walking away from 
  a Wi-Fi connection. 

<http://tidbits.com/article/13266>

  But several people have also eliminated Podcasts and other 
  podcasting apps as culprits. They can see from their online data 
  usage and from iOS’s tracking of cellular data (or by using 
  DataMan) that the device chews through hundreds of megabytes of cell 
  data over short periods of time, and they don’t know why. Josh 
  Centers is in the middle of a quest to figure this out, and I expect 
  others are as well.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/dataman-real-time-data-usage/id404513413?mt=8>
<http://joshcenters.com/2012/9/28/followup-on-excessive-iphone-5-data-consumption>

  John Herbert seems to have found one particular bad use case when 
  iTunes Match will download over a mobile broadband network even when 
  all the switches to use cellular data with Music and iTunes Match 
  are flipped to Off. His entry on the topic explains how these 
  settings are currently ignored when you start to download items from 
  the cloud or have music downloads in queue.

<http://lamejournal.com/2012/09/24/itunes-match-uses-cellular-data-even-when-you-say-no/>

  Verizon has released a “carrier settings update”, which is 
  supposed to deal with technical issues of connecting an iPhone to a 
  given mobile network, and it apparently has to do with an iPhone 5 
  using the cellular data network instead of Wi-Fi even when connected 
  to a Wi-Fi network. This doesn’t explain AT&T users’ problems 
  nor those of people with earlier iPhone models experiencing the same 
  data consumption.

<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5526>

  Over at the Economist’s Babbage blog, I suggested that it’s hard 
  to pin down blame when one can’t currently measure per-app use and 
  thus figure out what’s going on. That was possible with DataMan 
  Pro, which Adam Engst started testing for review before Apple pulled 
  it from the App Store, but for most people trying to figure out 
  what’s happening is completely frustrating — and expensive! This 
  isn’t “CellularDataGate,” but it’s clearly affecting more 
  than just a handful of people, and could involve folks paying tens 
  or even hundreds of dollars in excess data usage because of what 
  might be a bug in iOS 6 or Apple-provided apps.

<http://appadvice.com/appnn/2012/05/dataman-pro-now-includes-an-even-better-app-watch-and-goes-on-sale-for-a-limited-time>
<http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2012/09/mobile-data-usage>


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Solving iOS 6 Battery Drain Problems
------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst: <ace@tidbits.com>, @adamengst
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13303>
  7 comments

  Like millions of other people, when Apple released iOS 6 on 19 
  September 2012, I immediately updated my iPhone 4. I was somewhat 
  distressed the next day to receive the 20-percent battery life 
  remaining notification — at 1 PM on a day when I’d done almost 
  nothing with the iPhone! 

  My iPhone 4’s battery had been slowly getting worse due to age, 
  but back in April I had replaced the battery with a new one from 
  iFixit and battery life had immediately sprung back to normal. 
  Clearly iOS 6 was involved in some way, but troubleshooting anything 
  in iOS is difficult, and something like poor battery life is 
  especially hard, since it can take hours to determine if a fix has 
  worked. I was busy, and decided to ignore the problem briefly, since 
  I knew I’d be switching to the iPhone 5 when it arrived a day 
  later.

  When FedEx delivered my iPhone 5 on Friday, I immediately restored 
  my latest iPhone 4 backup to it, but I couldn’t really use it 
  until I could visit the AT&T store on Saturday to transfer my phone 
  number. The iPhone 4’s battery continued to drain quickly — to 
  the point where I had to charge it in the car on the way to the AT&T 
  store so I’d have enough power to use it in the store. As is 
  always the case at the AT&T store in Ithaca, the staff were friendly 
  and helpful (and the guy who helped us said he had received quite a 
  number of calls about iOS 6 causing problems that required 
  restoring, though battery life issues were not among them).

  I walked out with a fully functional iPhone 5 whose setup was 
  identical to my previous iPhone 4... including the battery drain. 
  Over the next few days, I watched the battery drop incredibly 
  quickly, sometimes as much as 10 to 20 percent per hour. Some 
  research on the Internet showed that lots of people were 
  experiencing the problem, though it certainly wasn’t ubiquitous.

  After reading a variety of discussions, I came across what turned 
  out to be the key clue. When I tapped Settings > General > About > 
  Diagnostics & Usage > Diagnostics & Usage Data, I saw what must have 
  been hundreds of crash logs for a process called webbookmarksd, 
  starting at the point I enabled connectivity for the iPhone 5. This 
  jogged my memory — corrupt Safari bookmarks syncing to iCloud had 
  previously caused problems for my MacBook (see “Solving 
  iCloud-Related Slowdowns in Lion,” 16 February 2012).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12796>

  The solution in that case was to delete the corrupt Safari bookmarks 
  locally, such that a new version came down from iCloud, and all was 
  well. When I investigated my Safari bookmarks, I discovered they 
  were a total mess. Since I don’t really use Safari, I’d never 
  worried about the fact that the bookmarks had been imported from 
  multiple other systems years ago and horribly duplicated through who 
  knows what syncing services. Despite this, they’d never caused 
  problems in previous versions of iOS.

  To jump ahead of myself, the solution once again was to delete 
  corrupt Safari bookmarks, but what’s easy on a Mac is often 
  difficult or even impossible in iOS. I’ll share my unsuccessful 
  intermediate attempts and some other approaches I didn’t think of 
  in time, and if you’re experiencing similar battery life problems, 
  I encourage you to try the less-destructive approaches before taking 
  the eventual tack I did. 

  Before you get started, make a local backup of your current Safari 
  bookmarks by choosing File > Export Bookmarks in Safari. That 
  creates a simple HTML file containing your bookmarks; you can edit 
  it in any text editor and reimport it into Safari using File > 
  Import Bookmarks if you want.

  My first attempt was to delete bookmarks via iCloud, which I 
  accomplished successfully by deleting all the bookmarks from within 
  Safari’s bookmark interface. That worked for Safari on my MacBook 
  Air and my original iPad, still running iOS 5, but Safari on the 
  iPhone 5 wouldn’t relinquish its bookmarks. I tried deleting these 
  bookmarks manually on the iPhone, but Safari either wouldn’t let 
  me delete at all, claiming that bookmarks were being synchronized, 
  or it simply ignored my taps on the Delete button.

  Next up, I followed a piece of advice I’d seen to reset all 
  settings and then restart the iPhone. This starts to be destructive, 
  since resetting all settings deletes all sorts of customized 
  settings in iOS and Apple’s built-in apps. You won’t lose any 
  data — pictures, contacts, music, apps, or the like — but you 
  will spend some time getting your iPhone to work as you expect 
  again. To reset your iPhone, tap Settings > General > Reset > Reset 
  All Settings. And to force iOS to start fresh with default settings, 
  restart your iPhone by holding down the Home and Sleep/Wake buttons 
  for at least 10 seconds, until the Apple logo appears. 
  Unfortunately, this made no difference for me — Safari’s 
  bookmarks remained stubbornly fixed in place.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Reset-All-Settings.png>

  Although it seemed that my iPhone’s bookmarks weren’t updating 
  from iCloud, I thought perhaps disconnecting from iCloud might break 
  them free. So I turned off Safari in Settings > iCloud, and agreed 
  that I wanted to delete the bookmarks from my iPhone. That made no 
  difference, so I next deleted the entire iCloud account, figuring 
  that everything should come back when I reconnected to iCloud later. 
  Still no change — those bookmarks persisted no matter what I 
  tried, and even after deleting the iCloud account, Safari claimed 
  that I couldn’t delete them because they were being synchronized.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Delete-from-iCloud.png>

  At this point, although I was certain that the problem wasn’t 
  related to the battery itself, it was easy enough to let it 
  discharge completely and charge overnight to recalibrate. I was 
  correct — that made no difference, but it was good to eliminate as 
  a possibility.

<http://www.apple.com/batteries/iphone.html>

  Before I tell you about the next step I took, let me recommend two 
  more things you could try that I didn’t think of in time. In 
  iTunes, select your iPhone in the sidebar and then scroll down to 
  the bottom of the Info view. Under the Advanced heading, there are 
  several checkboxes that enable you to replace information on the 
  iPhone with data from the Mac. If you have disabled iCloud syncing, 
  it’s possible that you’ll be able to select Sync Safari 
  Bookmarks from the Other section, select Bookmarks in the Advanced 
  section, sync again, and eliminate your corrupt bookmarks that way.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Replace-bookmarks-iTunes.png>

  Second, though I can’t vouch for this process personally, Shawn 
  Lebbon outlines a somewhat complicated process to replace the 
  corrupt bookmarks with a clean set in an Apple Support Communities 
  thread. Be sure to read the entire thread, and note that you’ll 
  need the $34.95 iBackupBot to perform the necessary surgery. It’s 
  non-trivial, but it may fix the problem without requiring you to 
  reconfigure from scratch.

<https://discussions.apple.com/message/19692893>
<http://www.icopybot.com/itunes-backup-manager.htm>

  Anyway, I was sufficiently frustrated by having to charge the iPhone 
  in the middle of the day just to make it to the evening that I had 
  come to terms with the work associated with starting from scratch. 
  Before that, just for giggles, I used iTunes to restore the iPhone 
  to my most recent backup. As expected, that restored the corrupted 
  bookmarks too, so I steeled myself for the last ditch effort — 
  setting up my iPhone 5 as a new iPhone. To do this, I put my iPhone 
  into Device Firmware Update (DFU) mode rather than use normal 
  recovery mode because DFU mode, as I understand it, restores the 
  firmware as well as iOS.

  To put your iPhone into DFU mode, turn the iPhone off by holding 
  down the Sleep/Wake button until you get the Slide to Power Off 
  slider, and slide it. Then connect it to your Mac via USB and press 
  both the Home and Sleep/Wake buttons for exactly 10 seconds. At 10 
  seconds, release the Sleep/Wake button, but continue to hold down 
  the Home button for another 5 seconds, until iTunes alerts you that 
  it has detected an iPhone in recovery mode. The iPhone screen should 
  be black at this point; if it shows the graphic of a USB cable 
  pointing at the iTunes icon, then you’re in normal recovery mode 
  and won’t get clean firmware.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/iTunes-recovery-mode.png>

  At that point, when you restore your iPhone, choose Set Up As A New 
  iPhone. When it’s done, your iPhone will look just as it did when 
  you took it out of the box, with factory default settings and just 
  the built-in apps. (I immediately verified that my corrupt bookmarks 
  were gone — finally!) You can then go through the various tabs in 
  iTunes to choose the apps and data you want to sync — I suppose 
  you could also download them from iCloud, though that would probably 
  be slower.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/New-iPhone.png>

  However, before you start setting up your clean iPhone, let me 
  suggest another thing to try, which I didn’t think about when I 
  was doing my setup. On one of the many threads on the Apple Support 
  Communities forums about this problem, Nuje recommended restoring 
  the last backup after doing the clean wipe. That might just bring 
  back the corrupt bookmarks, but for Nuje, the battery draining 
  problem did not return and it wasn’t necessary to spend time 
  rebuilding all the settings. If Nuje’s trick doesn’t work, just 
  wipe the iPhone again.

<https://discussions.apple.com/message/19634442#19634442>

  I’m actually not all that bothered by having to rebuild my 
  settings. It’s a little like forgoing Migration Assistant when 
  setting up a new Mac — it’s way more work, but every now and 
  then it’s nice to get a clean start. I’ve migrated the same 
  settings forward from at least three iPhones at this point, dating 
  back to iPhone OS 3 (before Apple renamed it to iOS), and who knows 
  what digital cruft might have been in there.

  The important thing is that my iPhone 5’s battery life is back to 
  normal — after I finished syncing my apps, I drove to meet my 
  running group, playing a podcast in the car for 7 or 8 minutes, 
  leaving the iPhone on standby in the glove compartment for an hour, 
  and then listening to the podcast again on the drive home. And you 
  know what? The battery percentage didn’t drop from 100% the entire 
  time. That’s more what I’ve come to expect from my iPhones. 

  I only wish it hadn’t taken me four days to work through all the 
  possibilities — I expect better from Apple’s updates, especially 
  on the iPhone, where troubleshooting is so much harder than on the 
  Mac.


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13303#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13303>


Going In Depth on Mountain Lion’s Notifications
-----------------------------------------------
  by Kirk McElhearn: <kirk@mcelhearn.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13241>
  5 comments

  One of the marquee changes in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion is 
  Notifications, a system-wide feature that enables applications to 
  tell you when certain events occur. These notifications may be 
  reminders for appointments you’ve set in Calendar, banners that 
  tell you when someone has sent you a chat in Messages, alerts for 
  new tweets that mention your user name, and more. Notifications can 
  be banners that disappear from the screen automatically, alerts that 
  you must dismiss manually, entries in Notification Center, sounds, 
  or icon badges. Some of these can be combined, so a single 
  notification might throw up an alert, play a sound, and appear in 
  Notification Center. (Notification Center is a pane that, when 
  revealed, slides in from the right side of the screen to display 
  past notifications and upcoming calendar events.)

  The Notifications feature comes from iOS, where it provides an 
  efficient way to stay up to date on what your apps are doing in the 
  background and see missed notifications in a single location (swipe 
  down from the top of the screen on any iOS device to reveal 
  Notification Center there). Since you can’t see multiple windows 
  on iOS, notifications are essential. But notifications in Mac OS X, 
  where you’re much more likely to have many apps generating alerts, 
  can quickly become a digital kvetch if you don’t rein in their 
  zealous behavior. Here are some tips to streamline your use of 
  Notifications, along with ways to avoid notification overload.


**Setting Things Up** -- For starters, let’s look at basic 
  configuration, which takes place in the Notifications pane of System 
  Preferences. The left-hand column shows the applications that can 
  generate notifications, with two sections: “In Notification 
  Center” and, if you scroll down, “Not In Notification Center.” 
  When you click an app’s name, the right-hand pane lets you control 
  how you will be notified of that app’s events. Here’s what you 
  can do:

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Notifications-preference-pane.png>

* To choose your alert style (None, Banners, or Alerts), click the 
  associated example icon or name.

* To add an app from Notification Center (and move it from one section 
  of the list to the other), click the Show in Notification Center 
  checkbox. Removing it merely requires deselecting that checkbox; you 
  can also drag apps in the list from one section to the other. You 
  can choose how many notifications Notification Center should display 
  for each app: 1, 5, 10, or 20 of the most recent notifications.

* To display a badge showing the number of notifications on an app’s 
  icon, select the Badge App Icon checkbox.

* To receive audible notifications, select Play Sound When Receiving 
  Notifications. Alas, the sound is not customizable. 

  You can also choose how to display items in Notification Center by 
  choosing By Time or Manually from the pop-up menu at the bottom of 
  the preference pane. When By Time is chosen, notifications appear 
  chronologically, with the most recent at the top. They are still 
  collected by app, so you won’t have email intermixed with iMessage 
  alerts, for instance. 

  Choose Manually, however, and notifications display according to the 
  order of your apps in the list on the left side of the Notifications 
  preference pane. You can drag apps up and down to change that order, 
  putting the items that are the most important to you at the top. 
  Frankly, the Manually option makes more sense for most situations, 
  since it gives Notification Center a level of predictability.

  There is one additional option available for those who use Twitter. 
  If you have set up a Twitter account in the awkwardly named Mail, 
  Contacts & Calendars pane of System Preferences, you can be notified 
  of mentions and direct messages. To turn off notifications of direct 
  messages, select Twitter in the app list, click the Notifications 
  button, and then deselect the Direct Messages checkbox; to restrict 
  mentions and replies, choose the “No one” radio button. Since 
  support for Twitter has been rolled into Mountain Lion, you don’t 
  even need to open a Twitter client for this to work.

  Now that Facebook is now integrated into Mountain Lion (see 
  “Facebook Integration Comes to Mountain Lion,” 19 September 
  2012), Facebook mentions and messages can also appear in 
  Notification Center when you log in using the Mail, Contacts & 
  Calendars preference pane. However, it does not offer the same 
  notification controls that Twitter does.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13278>


**Pick Your Poison** -- Even now, before many applications have been 
  rewritten to support Notifications, the sheer volume of 
  notifications can be overwhelming. If a banner or alert appears for 
  every email message you receive, every tweet that mentions you, and 
  every chat message you get via Messages, you may spend more time 
  dealing with these notifications than working. Luckily, there are a 
  variety of ways to control the flow.

  For every app, you can choose among None, Banners, and Alerts for 
  the alert style, and regardless of which of those you pick, you can 
  have notifications appear in Notification Center, increment an icon 
  badge, and play a sound. The trick is to combine these in 
  interesting ways for the maximum benefit and minimum annoyance.

  First, decide if you want visual notifications, which can take two 
  forms: alerts and banners, both of which pop up in the upper-right 
  corner of your screen. Alerts stick around until you click on them, 
  and they present buttons that let you react in various ways. Along 
  with a standard Close button, alerts from Messages provide a Reply 
  button, Mail alerts offer an Open button, alerts from Reminders and 
  Calendar have a Snooze button, and Twitter alerts have a Show 
  button. Clicking one of these action buttons generally takes you to 
  the associated app, though the Twitter alerts’ Show button uses 
  your Web browser to view your Twitter account. Multiple alerts stack 
  up at the right of your screen, so when you come back to your Mac, 
  you can see everything that happened. Alerts are best used for 
  important notifications that you don’t want to miss, such as 
  incoming iMessages from Messages or new events added to a shared 
  iCloud calendar (which Calendar displays).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Notifications-alerts.png>

  In contrast, banners stay on screen for only a few seconds, and then 
  slide away. They’re ideal for apps that are notifying you of task 
  completion, like when Transmit finishes uploading a file, or any 
  situation where missing the notification isn’t a problem, as with 
  Mail, where all the messages will be waiting in your Inbox when you 
  come back to your Mac.

  But being interrupted visually isn’t always a good idea, and for 
  such situations, it’s better to set the alert style to None, and 
  use the other options. If you get too many tweets, for instance, 
  having them appear only in Notification Center might be best, and an 
  email application might be best limited to icon badges, so you can 
  see with a glance at its Dock icon how many new messages are waiting 
  without having them interrupt you or clutter Notification Center. 
  It’s too bad that the sounds aren’t configurable, since that 
  would provide another way to receive background notifications that 
  convey just the information that a specific event has happened.

  Although the settings in the Notifications preference pane are 
  relatively minimal for the moment, we may see more apps offering a 
  Notifications dialog as Twitter does, giving you a bit more control 
  over what events generate notifications. Plus, some apps already let 
  you filter what sorts of notifications you receive in their own 
  preferences. For example, Apple Mail’s General preferences pane 
  has a New Message Notification setting, where you can choose to 
  limit notifications to messages that arrive in your inbox, those 
  from a list of VIPs, those from people in your Contacts, or messages 
  that are picked up by a smart mailbox. After all, getting 
  notifications for every piece of spam you receive would instantly 
  become irritating.

  Let’s say you step away from your Mac for a few minutes and come 
  back to a number of alert notifications from Messages. Rather than 
  click the Close or Reply buttons for each (which you certainly could 
  do if you wanted to deal with them one by one), you can also just 
  switch to Messages itself, at which point all the alerts immediately 
  dismiss themselves.

  Finally, if you need a break from alerts and banners interrupting 
  you, you can turn them off temporarily. To enable this Do Not 
  Disturb mode, Option-click the Notification Center icon at the far 
  right of your menu bar. This turns off alerts and banners, either 
  until you turn them back on with another Option-click, or until the 
  next day if you forget. Alternatively, open Notification Center and 
  swipe up to reveal a slider that lets you turn them off and on 
  again.


**Other Apps** -- As I noted, we’re seeing more apps support 
  Notifications every day, and they’ll appear in the app list in the 
  Notifications preference pane automatically. I also anticipate that 
  we’ll see some more interesting uses of Notifications over time. 
  For instance, one unusual example is Literature & Latte’s 
  Scrivener. You can set a target word, character, or page count for 
  either a text or a session, and get a notification when you reach 
  that target. So, when writing an article in Scrivener, I can target 
  the word count that I’ve been given by an editor, and get an alert 
  when I’ve reached that number, so I don’t have to display the 
  program’s status bar, which shows a live word count.

<http://literatureandlatte.com/>

  You may also wonder why some apps are listed already. Both Safari 
  and Google Chrome show up, but it’s unlikely you’ve seen a 
  notification from either. Desktop notifications are a feature of 
  HTML5 (check out the HTML5 Rocks site for an example), so you can 
  see them in action in Gmail and Trello (see “Trello Offers 
  Compelling Collaboration Tool,” 9 July 2012). Since the 
  notifications will be generated only when the appropriate page is 
  open, the feature can seem a bit haphazard.

<http://studio.html5rocks.com/#Time!>
<https://trello.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13101>

  As you can imagine, advertising-driven sites would quickly start 
  using notifications for ads, so both Safari and Google Chrome ask 
  for permission the first time a site tries to send you a 
  notification. If you change your mind, you can deny or remove 
  previously allowed sites in Safari’s Notifications preference 
  pane; for Chrome, dig down into Chrome > Preferences > Show Advanced 
  Settings > Privacy > Content Settings > Notifications > Manage 
  Exceptions.


**Using Notification Center** -- If you’re controlling the onslaught 
  of notifications by pushing some off to Notification Center, 
  you’ll find yourself in there fairly often. Luckily, Apple has 
  given us four ways to open Notification Center.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2012-09/Notification-Center.png>

* Most obviously, click the Notification Center icon at the right end 
  of the menu bar. 

* If you use a laptop or have a Magic Trackpad, swipe left from the 
  right edge of the trackpad with two fingers, one on top of the other 
  (this may be easiest with your left hand). This can require some 
  practice; I often find myself just pushing my Magic Trackpad itself 
  to the left. You can’t change this gesture, but if you find 
  yourself invoking it accidentally, you can turn it off in the More 
  Gestures view of the Trackpad preference pane. The gesture doesn’t 
  work with a Magic Mouse.

* If you don’t have a trackpad but still wish to use the mouse to 
  reveal Notification Center, you can set a hot corner. In the Mission 
  Control preference pane, click Hot Corners, and then choose 
  Notification Center for one of the corners. I recommend setting it 
  to the top-right corner, since that’s where the notifications 
  appear and where the Notification Center icon lives.

* For those who prefer working from the keyboard, you can set a 
  keyboard shortcut to show and hide Notification Center; 
  surprisingly, there is no preset shortcut. To do this, open the 
  Keyboard Shortcuts view of the Keyboard preference pane, select 
  Notification Center, and set the shortcut of your choice.

  Once you have Notification Center open, there are a few things you 
  can do in it. First, note that if you have Calendar set to use 
  Notification Center, it shows upcoming events. Second, you can 
  dismiss notifications by clicking the X button to the right of a 
  category. That’s useful for acknowledging that you’ve seen all 
  the tweets that are showing, for instance, and you want to make room 
  for new ones. 

  Most of the time, the notification will be all you need, but in some 
  cases, such as calendar events, it may be a trigger that reminds you 
  to do something, such as change the time or add location information 
  to the event. To open Calendar and jump quickly to the event, just 
  click the notification in Notification Center. This seems to work a 
  little sporadically with notifications generated by Safari and 
  Google Chrome.

  There is one special item in Notification Center: Share buttons that 
  appear at the top if you have set up a Twitter or Facebook account 
  in Mail, Contacts & Calendar. It’s self-explanatory — click the 
  Click to Tweet or Click to Post button, enter your message, and 
  click Send. If you don’t want to waste space on the Share buttons, 
  turn them off in the app list in the Notifications preference pane. 
  Before OS X 10.8.2, Notification Center didn’t automatically 
  shorten URLs; now it does.


**The Once and Future Growl** -- Before the Notifications feature 
  appeared in Mountain Lion, and before it even debuted in iOS, there 
  was Growl. This open-source notification manager provides a central 
  control center for notifications from over 300 applications that 
  have integrated Growl support into their code. For many Mac users, 
  Mountain Lion’s Notifications feature does pretty much the same 
  thing as Growl, but, perhaps unsurprisingly, Growl offers far more 
  flexibility and customization. Growl notifications can appear in a 
  variety of styles, and can be customized on a per-application basis. 
  Although Growl was originally free, it’s now available only 
  through the Mac App Store for $3.99.

<http://growl.info/>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/growl/id467939042?mt=12>

  Plus, there are a number of extras, such as HardwareGrowler and 
  GrowlTunes, that provide additional features. HardwareGrowler is an 
  application that generates Growl notifications when devices are 
  connected and disconnected from the Mac; supported types of devices 
  include those that use FireWire, USB, Bluetooth, filesystem volumes, 
  and network interfaces. GrowlTunes displays notifications that 
  report on the currently playing track in iTunes. Both are $1.99 
  through the Mac App Store.

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/hardwaregrowler/id475260933?mt=12>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/growltunes/id499190094?mt=12>

  The current version of Growl is 2.0, which integrates directly with 
  Notifications. Notifications from Growl-enabled apps appear in Growl 
  if it’s installed. But if Growl isn’t installed, notifications 
  from Growl-enabled apps use a non-configurable internal version of 
  Growl called Mist in 10.6 Snow Leopard or 10.7 Lion, or use 
  Notifications in 10.8 Mountain Lion. Plus, even if Growl is 
  installed in Mountain Lion, notifications can optionally appear both 
  in Growl and Notifications.

  Growl 2.0 offers a number of other potentially interesting features, 
  such as a split between visual alerts and actions, which can include 
  things like sending email, speaking associated text out load, 
  pushing notifications to an iOS device with the Prowl utility, and 
  more. Plus, actions can be chained together, so a single event could 
  generate email, speak out loud, and ping your iPhone. It also seems 
  to fix the CPU problems in the previous 1.4 version and provide even 
  more custom options for alerts.

<http://www.prowlapp.com/>

  It’s possible that many developers will rely on Growl’s software 
  development kit to get support for Notifications, with the thought 
  that those users who want Growl’s additional flexibility will 
  appreciate the Growl support, and those who don’t know or care 
  about what Growl brings to the game will be happy with 
  Notifications. In the end, whether you pony up a few bucks for Growl 
  comes down to whether you find yourself wanting more from 
  Notifications than Apple is interested in providing. As is often the 
  case, Apple has created a technology that does most of what many 
  users will want, but power users and those accustomed to Growl’s 
  capabilities will likely find Notifications lacking, and will be 
  happy to stick with Growl.

  Regardless, the Notifications feature is here to stay, and it will 
  become a central part of the Mac experience for most users. For the 
  most part, it’s well-designed and useful, and with some careful 
  thought put into configuration, you can avoid becoming overwhelmed 
  by too many notifications constantly interrupting your work.

  Now if only Apple would put some thought into the insane duplication 
  of notifications, since if you have several Macs and iOS devices, 
  many of these notifications will appear on every device. Joe Kissell 
  explains the problem — and suggests a solution in the form of 
  alerts that cascade from device to device — in “An Alarming 
  Abundance of Alerts” (13 May 2012). There has been little 
  indication of Apple moving in this direction — the closest is the 
  Do Not Disturb feature available by Option-clicking the Notification 
  Center icon and a similarly named feature promised for iOS 6. But 
  the mere fact that we saw notifications appear in iOS, and then 
  later in Mountain Lion, to be followed by iOS 6’s Do Not Disturb 
  feature, indicates that Apple is slowly refining the idea of how 
  Notifications should work. We can only hope that at some point, our 
  Apple devices will be smart enough to understand when a notification 
  has been delivered on one, such that it doesn’t need to appear on 
  others, thus reducing the digital noise of our lives.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13000>


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/13241#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/13241>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 1 October 2012
--------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13311>

**Server Admin Tools 10.7.5** -- Apple has released Server Admin Tools 
  10.7.5, which includes updates to its set of administration 
  applications for use with Mac OS X 10.7 Lion Server. In particular, 
  the Server Admin and System Image Utility tools add 
  NetBoot/NetInstall model filters for MacBook Pro and MacBook Air 
  (Mid 2012) models. Additionally, the System Image Utility improves 
  reliability of booting from NetRestore images, and the Workgroup 
  Manager correctly sets the password expiration date for Open 
  Directory users as well as shows the names of members of Active 
  Directory groups. (Free, 195.67 MB, release notes)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1596>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5315>

  Read/post comments about Server Admin Tools 10.7.5.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13309#comments>


**OS X Server 2.1.1** -- Apple has released OS X Server 2.1.1, which 
  has been updated with the capability of managing DHCP from within 
  the Server app as well as adding support for iOS 6 devices to the 
  Profile Manager. The release also enables management of the 
  blacklist settings for the Mail service, prevents spurious “Host 
  name changed” alert messages after restarting, addresses an issue 
  where AirPort base stations couldn’t be managed after updating 
  from previous versions of OS X Server (as well as some other 
  migration issues), and allows for setting a default NetBoot image in 
  the Server app. ($19.99 new, free update, 136 MB, release notes)

<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/os-x-server/id537441259?mt=12>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/ht5497>

  Read/post comments about OS X Server 2.1.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13308#comments>


**Mellel 3.0.2** -- RedleX has released Mellel 3.0.2, a maintenance 
  release brimming with fixes for the word processing app. Highlights 
  include fixes for an issue that caused the app to freeze 
  occasionally when entering the version browser, a problem that 
  caused some characters to appear doubled in the final citation after 
  a bibliography scan, an issue that caused the document view to stick 
  to the left when moving the window from screen to screen, and a 
  problem that caused the Spotlight importer to malfunction under OS X 
  10.8 Mountain Lion. The release also groups palettes in a single 
  “heap” when viewing on smaller screens (such as the 11-inch 
  MacBook Air) and updates the application icon. ($39 new, free 
  update, 34.9 MB, release notes)

<http://www.redlers.com/mellel.html>
<http://www.redlers.com/releasenoteslatest.html>

  Read/post comments about Mellel 3.0.2.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13307#comments>


**Aperture 3.4.1** -- Apple has released Aperture 3.4.1 to address 
  several issues that cropped up after the recent release of Aperture 
  3.4 (which introduced iCloud’s Shared Photo Stream feature). The 
  update fixes an installer issue that caused the app to quit on 
  launch, improves reliability of synchronizing photos to iOS devices, 
  resolves a problem with downloading and viewing photos synced from 
  Facebook albums, and addresses several other unspecified stability 
  issues. ($79.99 new, free update, 550.5 MB via the Mac App Store or 
  direct download)

<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1597>
<http://tidbits.com/article/13277>
<http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/aperture/id408981426?mt=12>

  Read/post comments about Aperture 3.4.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13306#comments>


**Airfoil 4.7.3** -- Rogue Amoeba has updated its Airfoil network 
  audio streaming app for the Mac to version 4.7.3, which now offers 
  full support for receiving audio through Airfoil Speakers from 
  devices running iOS 6. The Instant On component receives an update 
  to version 6.0.2 to fix several unspecified issues, and the Airfoil 
  Video Player has been fixed to avoid a crash on OS X 10.8.2. 
  Additionally, audio can be captured from the WebKit application on 
  Mountain Lion and Airfoil has been given an improved update process 
  with automatic downloads and installation on quitting the app (via a 
  newer version of Sparkle). ($25 new with a 15-percent discount for 
  TidBITS members, free update, 9.1 MB, release notes)

<http://rogueamoeba.com/airfoil/mac/>
<http://tidbits.com/member_benefits.html>
<http://www.rogueamoeba.com/airfoil/mac/releasenotes.php>

  Read/post comments about Airfoil 4.7.3.

<http://tidbits.com/article/13305#comments>


ExtraBITS for 1 October 2012
----------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff: <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/13310>

  Our main ExtraBIT this week is an announcement of the upcoming Mac 
  Computer Expo for those near San Francisco, but Adam Engst has also 
  been a guest on a couple of podcasts recently, talking both about 
  what’s new (the iPhone 5) and what’s old (TidBITS itself).


**Mac Computer Expo in Petaluma, CA on 6 October 2012** -- For those 
  looking for a day of in-depth Mac and iOS geekery near San 
  Francisco, it’s time once again for the Mac Computer Expo, in 
  Petaluma, CA. Organized by the indefatigable Lorene Romero, this 
  19th running of MCE will feature presentations by such Apple 
  community luminaries as Photoshop painter extraordinaire Bert 
  Monroy, Chris Breen of Macworld, Jeff Gamet of the Mac Observer, 
  photography guru Derrick Story, Adam Christianson of MacCast, author 
  Tom Negrino, and many more. Plus, you can even bring your dead 
  electronics to be recycled properly! MCE will take place from 9 AM 
  to 5 PM on Saturday, 6 October 2012; tickets are $7 in advance or 
  $10 at the door, and parking is free.

<http://www.maccomputerexpo.com/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13299#comments>


**Adam Engst Joins the MacJury to Evaluate the iPhone 5** -- Still 
  considering an iPhone 5? Listen in to Chuck Joiner’s MacJury 
  podcast with Adam Engst, Katie Floyd, Chuck La Tournous, and Mark 
  Fuccio, as the panel discusses the size of the iPhone, how much 
  difference the screen makes, the new EarPods, the speed of the 
  processor, the battery life, the new camera, and a lot more.

<http://www.macjury.com/macjury-1213-the-first-weekend-with-the-iphone-5/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13312#comments>


**Adam Engst Recaps History in A Good Talk Show** -- Alex Arena has a 
  new podcast called A Good Talk Show, and Adam Engst joined him 
  recently to talk about the history of TidBITS and the Take Control 
  ebook series, along with why it’s important to focus on what’s 
  important rather than what’s trendy. Not much new ground, but it 
  was a good conversation, and worth listening to when you have some 
  down time.

<http://www.goodshows.co/8/post/2012/09/03-adam-engst-of-tidbits.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/13313#comments>


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